Resource
          
        
                  School innovation in Europe: making students the owners of their learning process though teacher empowerment in the Tjotter school
          In 2011/2012, the Dutch School Inspectorate concluded that student results in the Tjotter school were too low. The school used to have a negative pedagogical climate, and suffered from a loss of trust between school and parents. 
        
      
          
Eventually, the school staff lost confidence in the former school leader and requested the school board to appoint a new leader. With an arrival of the current school leader four years ago, innovative processes started. A common view of education and teacher mutual learning was established, in addition to the culture of continuous improvement.
Key interventions:
- improvement of teachers’ pedagogical and didactical skills: team schooling with subsequent follow up and monitoring within the learning community of teachers, individual coaching and change of personnel
 - creating student portfolios to make students the owners of their learning process while students were also encouraged to participate in its formation
 - other approaches being used at school: positive behaviour support; encouraging student participation and (direct) feedback on student’s results; ‘Teach like a Champion’; and HGW (Action Oriented Approach) for student differentiation.
 
Further reading
Additional information
- 
            Evidence:N/A
 - 
            Funding source:Local funding
 - 
            Intervention level:Universal
 - 
            Intervention intensity:Ongoing
 - 
            Participating countries:Netherlands
 - 
            Target audience:Head Teacher / PrincipalParent / GuardianStudent TeacherTeacherTeacher Educator
 - 
            Target audience ISCED:Primary education (ISCED 1)Lower secondary education (ISCED 2)Upper secondary education (ISCED 3)